I keep telling you this is irrelevant. The airlock because we have no idea how big it is and the window because we know exactly how big it is in proportion to the rest of the ship.
We DONT know how big the window is in proportion to the ship from the detailing. The detailing was scaled to the hull of the ship with a certain ship size in mind. AFTER the detailing was done, the size of the ship was altered. The WINDOW WAS NEVER RESCALED, and thus is no longer a reliable measure for ANYTHING.
That the SCALE was increased does not make the PROPORTION unreliable, in fact quite the opposite: it clearly demonstrates an intent to make the ship larger by matching a small detail with a comparatively large space.
It absolutely DOES, because they no longer are the SAME scale. The window on the hull is now severat times LARGER in proportion to the hull than it should be. The window on the hull no longer scales correctly to the dimentions of the window on the set, so the scale is rendered inaccurate.
As I said, it seems likely that the designers turned the "sensors" into "windows" in order to avoid a big Kelvin-style feature on the front of the bridge, and scaled up the ship accordingly.
There is no evidence of this whatsoever
the visual evidence speaks for itself.
Yes, it does, and you aren't listening to it.
used the grounded shuttle on the right as my measure stick
And erroneously at that, since you cannot actually see where the struts are, nor can you see whether the shuttle is on deck level with the fantail or recessed slightly in a hangar level.
Yes you can, as you can see the level of the deck below the railing, as demonstrated in the cap.
On the other hand, using the original "airborne" shuttle as the measuring stick and using the correct "3 meter" figure from gear to nacelle gives you, again, five shuttle lengths, or roughly fifteen meters.
The shuttle is tilted at a funny angle, which makes that mark too big.
Not that any of this matters because you are again counting pixels from Bernd Russel's Hissy Fit diagram which was doodled into existence eight months before the movie was even released.
Matches the movie detail pretty close...want me to use another profile, tell me which one and where to find it and I'll redo the calcs.
Edit, ok, using the model image found here
http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=3040259&postcount=745
I snapped some lines and started counting
since this is a pure profile shot, no perspective distortion should mar the numbers.
The length overall of the ship is 48 "shuttlebay heights" .
Plugging in the three top contenders for that figure gets us:
15m shuttlebay = 720m (2362') length
20m shuttlebay = 960m (3149') length
24m shuttlebay = 1152m (3779') length
Take your pick.
#1 is only 6% under the 2500' (762m) given on the Interactive Tour site.
#2 is only 5% over the 3000' (914m) length given by various other sources, including ILM.
#3 is 21% over the 3000' (914m) from ILM, et al.
At this point, barring any new evidence, I'll agree to throw out #3.
I would still prefer #2, based on the apparent size of the shuttles in conjunction with the shuttle bay, but I suppose I could accept the 2500' length as well (bigger than
newtype's preferred figure, but only 6%).
Edit again: using the 2500' length, by the way, on that image scales out the airlock AND the window at ~2-2.5m tall. That actually WOULD be a very close fit to their actual assumed sizes.
newtype may be closer to being right than I am, just a little short.